5 stars
Dakota is a painting contractor whose small company is working on completing a big project at a new resort going up in her small hometown. She has come back to run her father's (stepfather's) painting business, since he is hurt and can't do it anymore. Dakota does not have wonderful memories of the town, since people with their prejudices and following where the town's "golden boy" from a good family call her trash. Dakota wants to repay her stepfather, though, for stepping up when he didn't have to, since the only connection they had was through her brother, his son.
Blake was a quarterback for a professional football team who is fresh off blowing out his knee. He has to find something to fill up his time, so he chooses to build a resort in small town Idaho. One day, he catches his security team watching someone swim out in the lake, even though they are not supposed to be there. Blake decides to take care of it, and meets Dakota. She doesn't know who he is at first, but does know before they part ways, and her enjoyment of swimming and diving in the lake seems to take a nose dive. Blake is used to people sucking up to him because he is famous, and he has a marriage plan, but he can't help but be attracted and intrigued by Dakota.
After unwittingly spending the day with Dakota's father, and seeing Dakota's art at the end of the day, Blake hires their company, and Dakota in particular, to paint his house in time for the big resort opening. They spend more time together, getting to know one another, but Blake has his marriage ideal, and Dakota has her plans to get out of town as quickly as she can.
I liked Dakota and Blake together. They actually got to know one another, instead of just assuming, or listening to gossip. Blake was strong and very protective of Dakota from the beginning, and building her up, even before he knew all of her story. And once he went on an official first date with Dakota, there was never anyone else for him, even with his plans to marry the perfect wife. A lot of times in romance novels, if the H has a preconceived notion of what he wants in a perfect partner, he enjoys his time with the h, but keeps looking for the perfect woman, and Blake didn't do that. He didn't even think about it, even if he didn't quite realize how he could be with Dakota.
Dakota had been hurt in the past, and was determined not to let someone who wasn't really going to be around be a major part in her life. But Blake kept slowly pushing, and she begins to let him in to know her.
They also actually talked things out like adults instead of running away with hurt feelings and assumptions. Blake was the one who insisted on it, but Dakota met him and actually listened to what he said, which was another awesome thing that is not typical in romances.
There was a little bit of mystery, and while it didn't really add anything to the story, it also didn't detract or distract from it. The attitudes of small towns came through loud and clear, both the good and the bad aspects of it.
I am a sympathetic crier, and I definitely shed tears in this one. Dakota had such a story to tell, and so many insecurities, and they must have hit me just right when I was reading yesterday, because I went through a few tissues.